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Volume 21 Issue 12, December 2015

In this issue, we present a series of Reviews and Perspectives on aging. Loss of proteostasis is a hallmark of aging and may be activated by treatment with rapamycin which results in autophagy as observed in cultured neuronal cells. Autolysosomes are shown in red, and nuclei in blue. Image credit: Antonio Diaz

Editorial

  • Aging is receiving more attention as a risk factor for human disease. With the correct modeling of human heterogeneity and consideration of the environmental factors involved in the aging process, we may be able to delay the onset of human disease.

    Editorial

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News Feature

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News in Brief

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News

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News Feature

  • Our list of newsmakers this year includes some standout personalities, from a price-hiking, former hedge fund manager to a persistent and now-well-recognized immunotherapy advocate.

    • Shraddha Chakradhar
    News Feature
  • In the past year, we have witnessed a flurry of debates in the biomedical arena, from the uproar surrounding price gouging to the ethical hand-wringing over the use of CRISPR-Cas9 technology for genome editing. Beyond these topics, 2015 also made news with vaccine mandates, epigenetic mapping and even an accidental shipment of anthrax.

    • Katherine Ellen Foley
    News Feature
  • This year's newsworthy drugs made strides against cancer, heart disease and more. Some drugs made headlines for their inability to succeed in clinical trials, and others are still waiting, stuck in limbo, for a chance to move forward in the pipeline. Here is a look at a few of them.

    • Shraddha Chakradhar
    News Feature
  • This year saw a whirlwind of insights gleaned into topics ranging from heart cell proliferation to organoid modeling. Here are a few of the research papers detailing some of these intriguing discoveries.

    • Randy Levinson
    • Alison Farrell
    • Brett Benedetti
    News Feature
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Correspondence

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News & Views

  • Microbiota depletion promotes type 2 cytokine signaling and browning in white adipose tissue of mice.

    • Beng San Yeoh
    • Matam Vijay-Kumar
    News & Views
  • Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a devastating X-linked disease that is characterized by progressive muscle degeneration and caused by mutations in dystrophin. Dystrophin is critical for myofiber structural integrity, but a new study reveals an additional important role for this protein in muscle stem cells.

    • Alexandra C Keefe
    • Gabrielle Kardon
    News & Views
  • A new study provides a rationale for the use of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors to trigger irreparable DNA damage as a therapeutic approach in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). It also provides support for combining PARP inhibitors with agents that reduce HOXA9 protein levels.

    • Lan Wang
    • Pierre-Jacques Hamard
    • Stephen D Nimer
    News & Views
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Q&A

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Perspective

  • In this Perspective, the current approaches to drug aging, and how new approaches may be developed in the future are discussed.

    • Celine E Riera
    • Andrew Dillin
    Perspective
  • In this Perspective, the mechanisms by which proteostasis is coordinated within and between cells is discussed with an emphasis on how these mechanisms are deregulated upon aging.

    • Susmita Kaushik
    • Ana Maria Cuervo
    Perspective
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Review Article

  • Toren Finkel reviews how metabolism and aging are connected, and highlights pathways that could be pharmacologically targeted to combat aging and age-related disease.

    • Toren Finkel
    Review Article
  • In this Review, Jan van Deursen and his colleagues discuss the recent progress in understanding the origin and identity of senescent cells in ageing and their contribution to age-related disease, in addition to discussing the potential for targeting these cells to counteract disease.

    • Bennett G Childs
    • Matej Durik
    • Jan M van Deursen
    Review Article
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Article

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Letter

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Resource

  • Understanding tumor metastasis is crucial to developing more effective cancer therapies. Here McCreery et al. analyzed the mutational profile of metastases from chemically induced skin tumors in mice and found that parallel evolution of synchronously disseminated tumor cells underlies most metastasis.

    • Melissa Q McCreery
    • Kyle D Halliwill
    • Allan Balmain
    Resource
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Focus

  • Aging is associated with functional impairments in cellular pathways controlling genomic stability, proteostasis and metabolism, and is a major risk factor for several of the most prevalent diseases. This series of Reviews and Perspectives highlights the recent data that point toward the specific molecular pathways that are perturbed during aging and discuss potential ways to manipulate these pathways to prevent or alleviate age-related diseases.

    Focus
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